“I, for one, don’t really approve of people coming onto these grounds and playing a game,” said Adam Seal. He’s the Business Director at Jefferson Funeral Home and Memorial Gardens in Trussville.

Seal said the cemetery has received several complaints of people playing Pokemon Go among the tombstones since the game was released last week. Some have even brought their dogs while playing.

Players are flocking to the cemetery because the game has identified Jefferson Memorial Gardens and about 20 locations within the cemetery as check-in points, or Pokestops.

“As innocent as it may be, there are still some people here who take this stuff very seriously,” he said. “I mean it’s their fathers, their sons, their brothers, their mothers out here and they may not want people out here playing and walking over the graves, bringing the dogs in and dogs using the restroom on the stones.”

The frustration growing so much that Seal contacted the game developer, Niantic, on Wednesday. He asked them to remove their cemetery as a Pokestop.

But their concern goes beyond just the gamers. Seal said the Pokemon Go identifies some of the individual gravestones at the cemetery as Pokestops.

“It’s one thing to have people walking through the cemetery, but to have these individuals’ names where the world can see them brings some concern to us,” said Seal.